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Sign of times as children aged two
recognise brand logos
Children as young as two can recognise two-thirds of
popular brand logos, a new study has found.
Psychologists have discovered that toddlers can
recognise the emblems of famous brands including McDonald's, Shell,
Nike, Mercedes and even Heineken.
The researchers say their findings show youngsters are influenced by
advertising at a much earlier age than previously believed. They claim
the success of shows such as Teletubbies have led companies to
deliberately target infants.
The report has provoked concern that very young children could be
unwittingly influenced by unscrupulous marketing firms.
The Dutch study, published in the Journal of
Applied Development Psychology, involved 234 children aged between
two and eight. The children were shown the logos of 12 brands, some of
which were aimed specifically at children, such as M&Ms sweets, Duplo
toys and Wall's ice cream, and others aimed at an adult market such as
Shell, McDonald's, Snuggle fabric conditioner, Nike, Mercedes, Heineken
and Camel cigarettes.
The academics behind the report found that, by the age of two, children
knew the symbols of between eight and 12 brands on average — even if
they were not sure what products those firms sold.
The report said: “Our study clearly shows that exposure to television
has consequences for the brand recognition of even the youngest
children.”
The academics said over the past decade advertisers had extended their
target market from a youngest age limit of six and were now promoting to
toddlers. The report continued: “This trend has accelerated even more
since the worldwide success of the tremendously popular toddler program,
Teletubbies. Advertisers have become even more aware of the
accessibility and susceptibility of the youngest target groups.”
There are currently a number of guidelines in the UK
to try and protect children from potentially harmful advertising. The
Advertising Standard Agency's broadcast code insists that: “Advertising
must not take advantage of children's inexperience or their natural
credulity and sense of loyalty.”
A spokesman for the ASA said: “The codes already in place to protect
children are pretty stringent, but we cannot stop people seeing adverts
on TV, so it comes down to parental and guardian control.”
However, Kevin Durkin, professor of psychology at Strathclyde
University, said young children were potentially very vulnerable to the
long-term impact of regular promotion of particular brands.
“People like what they are familiar with, so if a child is regularly
exposed to a particular brand, they may well end up feeling positive
towards that brand, which for an advertising strategy would be quite
effective in laying down (brand loyalty) at an early age. It is
certainly the case that younger audiences are more vulnerable than older
ones and that could be a cause for concern if it was exploited.”
Later this year a public consultation will take place on new rules
regarding advertising junk food to children, following a government
white paper on healthy eating published last year.
A Scottish Executive spokeswoman said: “As part of
Hungry for Success (the Executive's healthy eating programme), we expect
schools to end the promotion or advertising of unhealthy drinks and
snacks within the dining room.”
Fiona Macgregor
20 July 2005
http://news.scotsman.com/uk.cfm?id=1653742005
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